Just about every time one of the nine regular "Arrested Development" cast members has been interviewed over the last six or so years, there comes that moment, usually awkward, where the reporter pauses, shifts gears and meekly begins, "So I just have to ask …"

Even with the arrival of the Netflix episodes, those questions won't be going away. "Arrested Development" creator Mitchell Hurwitz designed the 15 new installments to be the first act of a three-act story that will conclude with, yes, the long-promised "Arrested Development" movie.

"So, it's not really going to be finished until those next two acts are played out," Jason Bateman says.

That's not to say that the show's Netflix run ends with an agonizing cliffhanger that fans will have to wait 18 months (or longer) to see resolved. But the episodes do raise questions, Bateman says, that will be answered only in the movie, which, by the way, hasn't been green-lighted, though everyone involved is thinking good thoughts.

"It could be in theaters or it might just be a two-hour thing on Netflix," Bateman says. Or it could, De Rossi interjects, be a whole bunch of movies.

"Ron Howard told me he wants to make a movie every year," she says.

"Great!" Cross complains. "Now people will be asking us about that for the next five years."

"Mission: Impossible -- Rogue Nation" headed into the weekend with expectations of a $40-million opening in the U.S. and Canada, but Paramount Pictures on Sunday reported that its Tom Cruise film actually brought in an estimated $56 million.

Fans who saw the last show of U2’s North American tour Friday at Madison Square Garden in New York City had an incredible bit of luck. For one thing, Bill Clinton was in the house, but blessedly refrained from sitting in on saxophone.

Longstanding discord between the families of star singers Whitney Houston and Bobby Brown erupted again Saturday to mar the memorial service for their daughter, Bobbi Kristina Brown, in the Atlanta suburb of Alpharetta, Ga.